Korean J Physiol Pharmacol.
1998 Feb;2(1):77-84.
Prostaglandin in regulations of renal blood flow during partial
ureteral obstruction in dogs
- Affiliations
-
- 1Department of Physiology, College of Medicine, Soonchunhyang University, Chunan 330-100, Korea.
Abstract
-
Ureteral obstruction causes increase in renal blood flow (RBF) and
partial impairment of the autoregulation of RBF. Although increased
renal prostaglandin production is responsible for the former, it is not
clear whether or not it is also responsible for the latter. Therefore,
we investigated the role which prostaglandins play in the
autoregulation of RBF during an ureteral pressure elevation (40 cmH2O).
Since the major mechanism of RBF autoregulation is the tubuloglomerular
feedback studying the interaction between ureteral pressure and RBF
autoregulation may reveal the role of prostaglandin in tubuloglomerular
feedback. To pursue the purpose, six anesthetized dogs were prepared
for the measurements of RBF, mean systemic and renal arterial pressure
(RAP) and the manipulation of ureteral pressure. The autoregulation
curves were determined during both control and elevation of the
ureteral pressure, before and after the pretreatment with indomethacin,
a cyclooxygenase inhibitor. The desired ureteral pressure was achieved
by vertically elevating the water-filled reservoir connected to the
ureteral catheter to 40 cm above the kidney level. In response to the
elevation of the ureteral pressure, RBF increased from 170 +/- 8 ml
cntdot min -1 to 189+/-8, and the systemic arterial pressure didn't
change significantly. During spontaneous urine flow, RBF autoregulation
was abolished when RAP was reduced to 59+/-3 mmHg. On the other hand,
during the ureteral pressure elevation, the autoregulation curves
shifted upward and rightward from control, and the pressure when RBF
autoregulation was abolished was 74 +/- 3 mmHg. The pretreatment of the
dogs with indomethacin failed to affect the lower limit of RBF
autoregulation during both control (63 +/- 5 mmHg) and the elevated
ureteral pressure (77 +/- 5 mmHg). Since RBF failed to increase in
response to the elevated ureteral pressure, RBF autoregulation curves
obtained during the elevated ureteral pressure shifted only rightward
from indomethacin control. The results indicate that the increased
intrarenal level of prostaglandin or prostaglandin-induced vasodilation
does not appear to bear any relation to the reduction in the
autoregulatory capacity during partial ureteral obstruction. It seems
that the partial impairment of the autoregulation during acute ureteral
obstruction is due to the consumption of tubuloglomerular feedback
mechanism at spontaneous RAP and that prostaglandin is neither mediator
nor effector of tubuloglomerular feedback mechanism.